Margaret McKelvy Bird
Margaret (Peggy) McKelvy Bird[1] (25 August 1909 – 28 December 1996)[2] was an American socialite and archaeologist who, with her husband and partner Junius Bird, undertook significant international expeditions.[2][1] She volunteered at the American Museum of Natural History for over 60 years, where she catalogued and managed the collections they had gathered.[2] Early lifeMargaret McKelvy was born in New York, the daughter of Florence Gloninger Orth and Robert McKelvy, vice president of the Tidewater Oil Company (founded by his father).[3] She attended Brearley School, followed by St. Timothy's School, and Bryn Mawr College, graduating in 1931.[3] McKelvy met archaeologist Junius Bird in 1931, and the pair married in 1934.[2] They went on to have three sons: Robert McKelvy, Harry Bouton, and Thomas Lee.[4][5] Upon their marriage, the couple travelled to Hopedale, Labrador, where Junius Bird was undertaking archaeological work.[3][6] CareerFollowing their time in Labrador, the Birds travelled to Southern Chile.[7] Writing to the Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin in 1935, Margaret's mother reported:
This was the beginning of a lifelong partnership in archaeological work, during which Margaret went from observer and supporter to active planner and participant.[2] Gordon Willey wrote in a biographical sketch of Junius Bird that Margaret "proved herself a formidable ally right from the start, flourishing under the conditions of a 1,300-mile trip in a nineteen-foot sailboat as well as journeying across the flats of far southern South America in a wind-driven Ford car."[1] Additionally, she kept detailed field journals on the couple's expeditions, her "witty, charming, and personable" writings conveying "the more human aspects of [Junius] Bird’s research while reinterpreting his theoretical ideas."[1] With Junius Bird, Margaret worked on excavations in Argentina, Patagonia, Peru, and Chile, including at Canadon Leon, Cueva Fell and Pali-Aike.[1] Later yearsJunius Bird died in 1982 at the age of 74.[4] Margaret McKelvy Bird died on 28 December 1996, and was buried with her husband in Greenwood Union Cemetery, Westchester County, New York. References
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